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A long-term copper exposure on freshwater ecosystem using lotic mesocosms: Primary producer community responses.
Aquat Toxicol. 2007 Feb 28; 81(2):168-82.AT

Abstract

Copper is commonly used as an algicide and plant herbicide in the aquatic environment. Despite of its frequent application in rivers, ponds and lakes, few studies have been performed at the ecosystem level on primary producers' communities. A long-term lotic mesocosms study was carried on, in 20m long channels, under environmentally realistic concentrations of copper (0, 5, 25 and 75 microgL(-1)) delivered continuously for 18 months. Results showed significant effects at the 25 and 75 microgL(-1) copper treatment levels on the phytoplankton, periphyton and macrophyte community structure. Effects on biomass and abundance were dissimilar depending on the studied community. Phytoplankton showed no abundance variation with treatment, whereas periphyton had higher biomass and macrophytes had lower coverage at 25 and 75 microgL(-1). Taxa richness was significantly affected for all primary producers communities at 25 and 75 microgL(-1). Some taxa seemed to be sensitive to copper, i.e. Cocconeis spp., Epithemia sp., Gomphonema spp., Lemna minor, Nasturtium officinale and filamentous macroalgae. Other taxa appeared to be tolerant or facilitated by indirect effects, i.e. Leptolyngbya sp., Mougeotia sp., Nitzschia palea, Pseudanabaena sp. and Ulothrix sp. and therefore increased in the 25 and 75 microgL(-1) treatments. Important indirect factors influenced the community responses, such as trophic interactions like decrease of grazing pressure, competition for light and nutrients and temperature favouring blue-green algae development. After 18 months of copper exposure, the no observed effect concentration at community level (NOEC(community)) for primary producers was set up at 5 or 4mugL(-1), if we consider the average effective concentration, with a lowest observed effect concentration (LOEC(community)) at 25 or 20 microgL(-1) (AEC).

Authors+Show Affiliations

Ecotoxicological Risk Assessment Unit, INERIS, Parc Technologique ALATA, 60550 Verneuil-en-Halatte, France.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17239970

Citation

Roussel, Hélène, et al. "A Long-term Copper Exposure On Freshwater Ecosystem Using Lotic Mesocosms: Primary Producer Community Responses." Aquatic Toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands), vol. 81, no. 2, 2007, pp. 168-82.
Roussel H, Ten-Hage L, Joachim S, et al. A long-term copper exposure on freshwater ecosystem using lotic mesocosms: Primary producer community responses. Aquat Toxicol. 2007;81(2):168-82.
Roussel, H., Ten-Hage, L., Joachim, S., Le Cohu, R., Gauthier, L., & Bonzom, J. M. (2007). A long-term copper exposure on freshwater ecosystem using lotic mesocosms: Primary producer community responses. Aquatic Toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands), 81(2), 168-82.
Roussel H, et al. A Long-term Copper Exposure On Freshwater Ecosystem Using Lotic Mesocosms: Primary Producer Community Responses. Aquat Toxicol. 2007 Feb 28;81(2):168-82. PubMed PMID: 17239970.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - A long-term copper exposure on freshwater ecosystem using lotic mesocosms: Primary producer community responses. AU - Roussel,Hélène, AU - Ten-Hage,Loïc, AU - Joachim,Sandrine, AU - Le Cohu,René, AU - Gauthier,Laury, AU - Bonzom,Jean-Marc, Y1 - 2006/12/17/ PY - 2006/07/17/received PY - 2006/12/01/revised PY - 2006/12/03/accepted PY - 2007/1/24/pubmed PY - 2007/4/25/medline PY - 2007/1/24/entrez SP - 168 EP - 82 JF - Aquatic toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands) JO - Aquat Toxicol VL - 81 IS - 2 N2 - Copper is commonly used as an algicide and plant herbicide in the aquatic environment. Despite of its frequent application in rivers, ponds and lakes, few studies have been performed at the ecosystem level on primary producers' communities. A long-term lotic mesocosms study was carried on, in 20m long channels, under environmentally realistic concentrations of copper (0, 5, 25 and 75 microgL(-1)) delivered continuously for 18 months. Results showed significant effects at the 25 and 75 microgL(-1) copper treatment levels on the phytoplankton, periphyton and macrophyte community structure. Effects on biomass and abundance were dissimilar depending on the studied community. Phytoplankton showed no abundance variation with treatment, whereas periphyton had higher biomass and macrophytes had lower coverage at 25 and 75 microgL(-1). Taxa richness was significantly affected for all primary producers communities at 25 and 75 microgL(-1). Some taxa seemed to be sensitive to copper, i.e. Cocconeis spp., Epithemia sp., Gomphonema spp., Lemna minor, Nasturtium officinale and filamentous macroalgae. Other taxa appeared to be tolerant or facilitated by indirect effects, i.e. Leptolyngbya sp., Mougeotia sp., Nitzschia palea, Pseudanabaena sp. and Ulothrix sp. and therefore increased in the 25 and 75 microgL(-1) treatments. Important indirect factors influenced the community responses, such as trophic interactions like decrease of grazing pressure, competition for light and nutrients and temperature favouring blue-green algae development. After 18 months of copper exposure, the no observed effect concentration at community level (NOEC(community)) for primary producers was set up at 5 or 4mugL(-1), if we consider the average effective concentration, with a lowest observed effect concentration (LOEC(community)) at 25 or 20 microgL(-1) (AEC). SN - 0166-445X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17239970/A_long_term_copper_exposure_on_freshwater_ecosystem_using_lotic_mesocosms:_Primary_producer_community_responses_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0166-445X(06)00437-1 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -